Abstract
Learning new phonetic categories in a second language may be thought of in terms of learning to focus one’s attention on those parts of the acoustic-phonetic structure of speech that are phonologically relevant in any given context. As yet, however, no study has demonstrated directly that training can shift listeners’ attention between acoustic cues given feedback about the linguistic phonetic category alone. In this paper we discuss the results of a training study in which subjects learned to shift their attention from one acoustic cue to another using only category-level identification as feedback. Results demonstrate that training redirects listeners’ attention to acoustic cues and that this shift of attention generalizes to novel (untrained) phonetic contexts.
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Francis, A.L., Baldwin, K. & Nusbaum, H.C. Effects of training on attention to acoustic cues. Perception & Psychophysics 62, 1668–1680 (2000). https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03212164
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03212164